Well, prefetching isnt a new topic but there is possibility that it can be optimized into the next generation of computing...

I found an interesting Google SoC Project page that shows some promise, ive been searching around for prefetching and ReadyBoost solutions for Ubuntu and ran accross this...

From here:In todays computer systems the main bottleneck is not CPU but disk access which is several orders of magnitude slower than CPU and memory. In such circumstances the way to improve application performance is to prefetch data it needs from disk before it even requests it and it is the point of prefetching techniques.The example of prefetching solution is Windows prefetcher.

"In this thesis we develop preload, a daemon that prefetches binaries and shared librariesfrom the hard disk to main memory on desktop computer systems, to achieve fasterapplication start-up times. Preload is adaptive: it monitors applications that the userruns, and by analyzing this data, predicts what applications she might run in the nearfuture, and fetches those binaries and their dependencies into memory. We build a Markov-based probabilistic model capturing the correlation between everytwo applications on the system. The model is then used to infer the probability that eachapplication may be started in the near future. These probabilities are used to choosefiles to prefetch into the main memory. Special care is taken to not degrade systemperformance and only prefetch when enough resources are available. Preload is implemented as a user-space application running on Linux 2.6 systems."

Howto test optimizations:*Warning* This is experimental and I have not tested this yet, I am about to once im done posting this, This may or may not be correct, let me know of any issues!The following is an edited version of there wiki located here

Testing Boot Prefetching and Applications Prefetching

Introduction

First testing version of kernel with automatic boot prefetching and tracing is available. This version is precompiled for Debian-based systems (tested on Ubuntu Gutsy, other distributions might not work). The kernel is standard Ubuntu kernel with these prefetch patches.Standard disclaimer applies: this is experimental version, it might damage your system use at your own risk and only on systems where you have backups.*This Requires Ubuntu Gutsy*InstallationIn order to use kernel with prefetching: Download kernel linux-image debDownload linux-headers.debInstall linux-image deb packageInstall linux-headers deb packageRemove readahead package using: sudo apt-get remove --purge readahead -please note that this will cause removing (x/k/edu)ubuntu-desktop package.Download userspace prefetch support deb and install it using:dpkg -i prefetch*.debNow reboot and select "kernel 2.6.22.6pf.3" during boot.UninstallationIn order to remove kernel with prefetching:Reboot into standard (non-prefetching) kernel.Remove prefetch userspace support files using apt-get remove --purge prefetchInstall readahead and (x/k/edu)ubuntu-desktop package.Remove linux-image package with prefetching support (with "pf" in name).Resources:Launchpad ProjectSummer Of Code 2007 ProgressDevelopment DiscussionsGoogle Code Page